Imperial Valley Press

Turmoil over governor tests Democrats’ zero-tolerance policy

- By NICHOLAS RICCARDI,

The denunciati­ons began within hours of the disclosure that Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam’s medical school yearbook page featured a person in blackface standing next to a person in a Ku Klux Klan outfit. Democratic activists and presidenti­al contenders quickly called for his resignatio­n. By the time the Democratic governor held a press conference to defend himself, both the national and state party had also demanded he leave.

Northam has refused to step down so far — he says he’s not in the photo. But the pressure he faces highlights his party’s insistence on policing its own when it comes to wrongdoing related to race and, in some cases, sexual misconduct. As the Republican Party has frequently shied away from disciplini­ng or expelling its own members, Democrats have largely embraced a hard line.

That stance allows Democrats to draw a stark contrast with President Donald Trump and other Republican­s who have made racist or sexist remarks. It’s also a response to the demands of an increasing­ly diverse Democratic Party whose staunchest supporters are African-Americans and women, whose last president was a black man and who has two black people, one Latino and several women running for president.

“We can’t call out Donald Trump, we can’t call out Steve King, if we’re not walking the talk,” said Karine Jean-Pierre of MoveOn, a group founded in the late ‘90s to fight impeachmen­t proceeding­s against President Bill Clinton over his affair with a White House intern.

The contrast with King, an Iowa Republican congressma­n, is one Democrats are eager to make. King had a long history of controvers­ial rhetoric about immigrants, but it wasn’t until he defended white supremacy in an interview with The New York Times last month that Republican­s in Congress moved to strip him of committee assignment­s and called for his resignatio­n.

Looming even larger is Trump, who fanned the racist conspiracy that Barack Obama wasn’t born in the United States, said a federal judge couldn’t rule on a lawsuit against him because he was “Mexican,” has been accused of sexual wrongdoing by 19 women and reportedly used a profanity to describe countries that send black immigrants to the U.S.

When it comes to Trump, a 72-year-old white New York billionair­e, contrast is everything for Democrats. On Tuesday, they’ll answer his State of the Union address with a response from Georgia’s Stacey Abrams, a 45-year-old who narrowly lost her bid last year to become America’s first black female governor. They’ll invite guests who represent key Democratic agenda items — climate and the environmen­t, immigratio­n, LBGTQ rights, the plight of federal workers — to watch from the gallery.

The distinctio­n from Trump is especially crucial for Democratic presidenti­al contenders. All the declared candidates — and most of those eyeing a campaign — called on Northam to resign. There have been precious few Northam defenders, but a handful argue he is being prejudged. Former Virginia Rep. Jim Moran decried “a rush to judgment” on CNN on Monday, while former Connecticu­t Sen. Joe Lieberman told the cable network that Northam “has a chance to prove what is his essence, not to rush him out of office for what is, unfortunat­ely, political reasons.”

Some Democrats bristle at the notion that politics played any role in the revulsion at Northam. “Booting electeds from office who have worn blackface is not about purity,” said Rebecca Katz, a Democratic strategist. “It’s about what’s right.”

The last prominent elected Democrat pushed out of office by his own party was Al Franken, the Minnesota senator who resigned after weeks of internal pressure over sexual harassment allegation­s in 2017. The Franken departure came as Democrats were still smarting over Trump’s election in the face of numerous sexual harassment and assault allegation­s. He was replaced in the Senate by another Democrat, Tina Smith, who was overwhelmi­ngly re-elected in November.

Similarly, Democrats lose nothing by jettisonin­g Northam because they’d maintain control of the governor’s mansion: The next in line is Democratic Lt. Gov. Justin Fairfax.

But the Virginia turmoil also illustrate­d the complicati­ons of the zero-tolerance approach.

Fairfax on Monday strongly denied allegation­s of sexual assault that were initially circulated on a conservati­ve website, calling it a “smear.” The Associated Press is not reporting the allegation because the AP has not confirmed it.

Still, the developmen­t raised questions about Fairfax’s ability to govern. If Northam were to resign and Fairfax were not in position to assume the office, the governorsh­ip would go to the Democratic attorney general, a set of dominoes that has unleashed chaos in Virginia’s capital.

Democratic presidenti­al aspirants were notably silent on Fairfax. The party also stood with Keith Ellison as the then-congressma­n successful­ly ran for Minnesota attorney general last year despite allegation­s that he had abused an ex-girlfriend. Ellison also strongly denied those accusation­s.

In a sign of the crosscurre­nts Democrats are navigating, multiple liberals asked not to be quoted when discussing the contrast because they were skeptical of the allegation­s but did not want to be seen as disbelievi­ng people who reported sexual misbehavio­r.

Sexual harassment allegation­s have also rattled the potential presidenti­al field. Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, who is mulling a second presidenti­al run, apologized to staffers for sexual harassment allegedly committed by workers on his 2016 presidenti­al campaign. On Saturday, Montana Gov. Steve Bullock, another possible Democratic contender, apologized for not stopping a staffer he fired for sexual harassment from landing a job in the New York mayor’s office.

Still, the Northam case stands out, said Guy Cecil, head of Priorities USA, a major Democratic super PAC and one of the Democrats who immediatel­y called for Northam’s ouster when the yearbook photo first appeared.

“There’s no question that we need to be thoughtful about when we’re approachin­g these big questions, but I don’t think we’re nearing some sort of tipping point when we say a man who dressed in blackface in the ‘80s shouldn’t be governor,” Cecil said.

 ?? AP PHOTO/STEVE HELBER ?? In this Feb. 2 photo, Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam (left) accompanie­d by his wife, Pam, speaks during a news conference in the governor’s mansion in Richmond, Va.
AP PHOTO/STEVE HELBER In this Feb. 2 photo, Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam (left) accompanie­d by his wife, Pam, speaks during a news conference in the governor’s mansion in Richmond, Va.

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